Fiat, one of Italyâs biggest carmakers, has signed a deal with Serbia
moving the company quickly toward a USD one billion project to
privatise the ailing automobile factory Zastava.

According to the pact signed with Zastava labour unions, Fiat has
agreed not to lay off workers, who would also receive backlog salaries
totaling 10 million Euro and other benefits. In return, local
authorities agreed to tax and investment incentives including land for
installations free of charge over the first decade of the investment.

Fiat and Serbia had signed a letter of intent on a joint venture
envisaging a 700 million Euro investment by Fiat for its 70 percent
stake in Zastava. Serbia would pour an additional 100 million Euro into
the firm, which had effectively stalled with the disintegration of the
former Yugoslavia in 1991 and the loss of its market.

The crisis of Zastava has dragged the entire region around Kragujevac,
a prosperous industrial town in former Yugoslavia, into deep economic
depression lasting two decades. The ambitious plan to put out 300,000
A- and B-segment cars from Zastava by late 2010 would lead to a
turnaround in the region, Serbian officials said. Fiat opted for the
Zastava purchase despite May 11 snap polls in which Serbia was to vote
either for a pro-European bloc or for their nationalist rivals, who
oppose closer ties with the West over the Kosovo policy of big powers.
Hinging on the elections was the stabilisation and association
agreement that Serbia signed en route to EU membership. Nationalists
who were leading in popularity surveys said they want the deal annulled.

âThis is a start of a big project,â Fiat Vice-President Alfredo
Altavilla said in Kragujevac, 120 kilometres south of Belgrade. âWeâre
committed to it regardless of the outcome of the elections.â

He hinted that the Italian brand might place the entire production of
one of its models in Zastava, with which Fiat has cooperated since the
1950s.